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Gang problem reaching crisis proportions in Cape Town - De Lille

The City is determined to win the war against gangs and drugs

Cape Town has a long and sad history of gangs and drug abuse. This history spans decades and involves a dangerous and destructive relationship with patterns of substance abuse. These gangs make the distribution of narcotics their prime business.

While the names of gangs and the types of drugs have changed, their destructive effects have not. They are still eroding some of our communities, eating away at the social fabric through addictive behaviour and violent acts.

While it is in some ways a truism to say that every generation always thinks ‘things have never been this bad,' I believe that we have a case to make that the gang-problem in Cape Town has reached crisis levels in recent times.

Direct efforts aimed at breaking up gangs and their networks of drug distribution through safety and security measures:

    Identifying gangs and drug hot spots in terms of complaints;
    Building profiles of gangs and drug dealers;
    Coordinating the execution of integrated search warrants;
    Increasing the number of roadblocks in order to cripple gangs and drug networks;
    Dedicated enforcement action against drug dealers;
    Participation in local drug action committees;
    Committing ourselves to the principles of restorative justice.

A sensitive issue with me now

Date: 2012-10-11 01:43 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] rick-day.livejournal.com
Gangs are a problem because often it is the only peer network available to minority youth. It is financed with drug sales.

Gangs are the only peer network because of a breakdown in the nuclear family.

There is a breakdown of the nuclear family because of a lack of responsible males in the community to raise their children, as opposed to allowing the streets to raise them.

There is a lack of responsibility in males because most did not finish school, or allowed an opportunity to learn a skill or trade.

Those males did not finish school because they had no peerage or became a ward of the state.

They had no peerage because their fathers were jailed due to racist drug prohibition laws.

Racist drug prohibition laws were enacted to keep the black community in a state of entropy.

The solution is to legalize all drugs, and divert those resources to reversing the damage one generation at a time.

Re: A sensitive issue with me now

Date: 2012-10-11 06:01 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] luzribeiro.livejournal.com
I see what you did there.

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